Sara Høyrup

Sidst opdateret: 23. september 2018
Sara Høyrup
Sara Høyrup er uddannet konferencetolk og cand.mag. i spansk og engelsk.

Beskrivelse:

GERMANSKE & ROMANSKE SPROG:
(ny)norsk · svensk · tysk | engelsk | fransk · catalansk · spansk

EU-certificeret simultantolk & sprogmagister
Journalist & foredragsholder

Takster: 3.300 kr. pr. ark

Kontaktoplysninger:

Adresse: 08001 ES-Barcelona
ES-08001 Barcelona
Land: Spanien Tlf: 27477300 Mobil: 27477300 E-mail: Klik for at se e-mail CVR: spansk momsnr. ESX2726996R

Medlem Af:

Dansk Oversætterforbund

Online Referencer:

Flere referencer:

CURRICULUM : Her kan du se teksteksempler og uddannelser

Tolkene.dk : Her kan du se mit oversættelsesbureau

Korrektur-nu.dk: Her kan du se nærmere om min røde rettepen

Spansktimer.dk : Her kan du kigge, hvis du gerne vil lære spansk

Google mit navn + Weekendavisen / Kristeligt Dagblad / dagbladet Information / dagbladet Politiken, hvis du vil se mine avisoversættelser

 

Oversætter fra:

Amerikansk, Dansk, Engelsk, Fransk, Katalansk, Norsk (bokmål), Nynorsk, Spansk, Svensk, Tysk

Oversætter til:

Amerikansk, Dansk, Engelsk (britisk), Spansk

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Udgivelsesår: 2017

Interpreters Taken Hostage

Official interpreters in the Danish asylum system: simply going through the motions?

Interpreters Taken Hostage

By Sara Høyrup, asylum interpreter 2008-2017

When fleeing war or seeking a future, many asylum-seekers -whether they be refugees or simply immigrants- make up dud narratives so as to fit into the systems we offer them. Of course they do. And so, just as naturally, the immigration authorities are on the look-out for incoherences, chinks and crevices in the stories they are being told.

However, the interpreters are taken hostage by a barely veiled anti-asylum agenda when they are prevented from carrying out their task properly, and their inevitable occasional mis-translations are found to differ from those in the original ”interview” (nothing like euphemisms to gloss over power-wielding).

The hindrances for a job well done are many: Most interpreters aren’t trained, none of them receive the case documents before or even during the task at hand, there is no time or room to check for understanding, and many asylum-seekers are only given interpreters in languages of which they only master a pidgin version. The interpreter and the asylum-seeker therefore do not really speak the same language, the interpreter may be any bilingual person that has mysteriously made it onto the list of official interpreters, and the problem is not a slight one: any “changes of story” (even if they might just be changes of translator) are grounds for not granting asylum.

It looks like tools of a hidden political agenda, although it could of course simply be down to downright ignorance, and absolute indifference amongst the people in charge. It certainly is in accordance with what a majority of Danes seem to want, and in that sense it is democratic in spirit, but still unprofessional, unlawful and amoral.